Mark Hanna P. (Female.) 
MEDIUM TO QUITE LATE. Pistillate. 
A large and beautiful bright red berry; with 
sparkling yellow seeds and light green calyx. 
The flesh is scarlet, solid and very rich. As a 
producer it certainly is a prize 
winner; the big berries hang in 
clusters like cherries; size and 
shape are indicated in the illus- 
tration. It has a flavor pecu- 
liar to itself, somewhat on the 
cherry order. The foliage 
' grows tall and droops over to 
each side of the row, spreading 
apart in the middle of the row, 
thus allowing the berries which 
grow in the center to color 
evenly as do those on the outer 
edge. Set the plants thirty inches apart and 
allow them to form a double-hedge row. This 
is the fourth year of selection in our breeding 
bed, and it is rapidly gaining in all points and 
is one of our favorites. 
Some Things We Do Not Do 
PLEASE remember that the R. M. Kellogg 
Co. does not sell plants for fall setting. Our 
shipping season is confined to from six to eight 
weeks in the spring — from the earliest moment 
we can get to the plants in March or April, to 
the latest day the season permits the shipment of 
plants with safety— depending on the season. 
After our shipping season is closed we cannot 
ship to anybody underany circumstance. Another 
thing we do not do is to deal in potted plants. 
This in answer to a countless number of inquiries 
received each season. 
Oregon Iron Clad, B. (Male.) 
VERY LATE. Bisexual. A very large, 
broad and well-formed berry, of a glossy dark 
red that extends through to the center. Flavor 
is very rich, making it one of the most popular 
of table berries. Its produc- 
tiveness and fine shipping qual- 
ities make it a great favorite, 
and on the Pacific coast it is 
exclusively grown in many 
localities. The seeds are bright 
yellow, and berry, seed and 
calyx, all retain their fresh 
brilliancy for days after being- 
picked. It makes a beautiful 
show when in full fruit. The 
foliage is extra large, light 
green and tall; the fruit stems 
are of more than ordinary 
length, holding their clusters orotot. ..on Clod 
of berries out in full view. 
When setting plants for fruit, put them thirty 
inches apart in the row, and layer the runners so 
they will form the double-hedge system. This 
makes the fifth year of selection and it is mak- 
ing gains at all points. 
Kellogg Plants Yield More Than $500 an Acre 
A A. SNETHEN of Pontiac, 111. , writes us as 
• follows: " I think I owe you thanks for the 
plants I have received from you. 1 have bought 
plants from your company for tlie past ten years 
and have never been disappointed in them. I 
grow them after the Kellogg system in hedge 
rows, and they always do finely, making most 
always more than $500 per acre, which I con- 
sider pretty good. " 
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